Winter occurs due to the tilt of the Earth, not due to its distance from the sun. Winter in the Northern Hemisphere occurs when the North Pole is tilted away from the sun; winter in the Southern Hemisphere occurs when the Southern pole is tilted away from the sun. Locations near the equator do not experience the extremes seen nearer the poles.
thanks so much for posting this video! I really appreciate being able to see this all the way through! Im from a warm island in the caribbean and so this always fascinates me. thank you
Hello with my friend wer were wondering at the 6 day stamp, how deep is the ice? Is it just the surface or like 3 meters down, thanks, amazing fireworks!!
Thanks for the comment. I didn't measure the ice thickness, but it was still very thin and not able to support any weight (my foot easily went through at the shoreline). I would be surprised if the ice was more than a few centimetres thick at the end of this video. We have had a lot of snow this year. At its deepest we had nearly five feet accumulate, with a total of nearly 10 feet of snowfall for the season. The snow has finally started to melt, and I have the camera going to capture the thaw... stay tuned! Measuring the ice thickness is a great idea, I will try to incorporate some measurements into the next video if I can do so safely. Cheers, and thanks for watching!
Yes. Thanks for your comment. The little bay to the right was sheltered from the sun and wind a bit more and started to freeze up first. November 2nd was a calmer day and the lake froze as soon as night fell. 2:18
To expand on your comment, we had a very bright meteorite streak briefly across the sky not long after this footage was taken (we caught a quick glimpse through our living room window as we were watching TV in the dark, it actually lit up the room for a second). Our home is directly across the lake, and I was very hopeful I might have caught a single image on the camera. I searched frame by frame, but we missed it. The camera takes one photo every 10 seconds and it managed to sneak in between clicks. But we have gotten some decent pics of wildlife, and I have a few frames of local townsfolk curiously peeking into the lens.
Haha! I bet those confused faces looking into the camera really gave a good tickle in your belly. And hey! Don't be discouraged that you missed the meteorites on the camera, because sometimes it's more precious to capture beautiful things like that in the lens of your eyes, to capture in the gallery of your memories. God bless you ☺️❤️
Very cool I could be wrong but it seems like day turned to night then when the sun illuminated a new morning over a fresh frozen sheet of ice over the lake… I was hoping the footage you captured and uploaded would show the ice forming throughout the daylight hours. It makes sense that it would freeze during the night due to it being colder with the moon hanging in the sky
I cut out the majority of the night footage, because a black screen is not very interesting to watch. I kept it running longer for the night it froze because you could see the reflection in the moonlight. I too was hoping to see it freeze in the day time. It came close though, the lake began to freeze within an hour of the sun setting.
I am proud that I literally thought of this and search it in yt. There's no winter in Philippines so I always wondered how this work
You mean there is no snowing and freezing lakes? Winter is global.
@@Petiscorei what do you mean winter is global?
@@CrescentXien Winter is when the earth is far away from the sun, it happens on the entire planet.
Winter occurs due to the tilt of the Earth, not due to its distance from the sun. Winter in the Northern Hemisphere occurs when the North Pole is tilted away from the sun; winter in the Southern Hemisphere occurs when the Southern pole is tilted away from the sun. Locations near the equator do not experience the extremes seen nearer the poles.
@@LifesLaboratory thanks. I don't know how to explain to that guy about seasons. I can't believe there are people who thought like this
Its so cool to see the sun and moon making the circle around. Nature is so beautiful. Thank you for taking the time to make this.💕
You're very welcome. Thanks for watching and commenting!
this channel is gold,looking forwards for this years video
Wow nature is so beautiful. Thanks for uploading.
Thank you for commenting. Happy New Year!
thanks so much for posting this video! I really appreciate being able to see this all the way through! Im from a warm island in the caribbean and so this always fascinates me. thank you
Glad you enjoyed it. You're very welcome!
Just beautiful!
The moon makes me smile!
This little lake is very peaceful and calming in the moonlight. Thanks for commenting!
Excellent project!! Love it!!
Thanks. I have many, many hours of footage that I need to edit and compile. I will eventually get to it... one day. ;)
absolutely beautiful
Who else searched up time lapse lake freezing
More of this please.
Thanks! I have many, many hours of footage that I really need to edit and post. I've been rather lazy, but I will get there eventually. ;)
Hello with my friend wer were wondering at the 6 day stamp, how deep is the ice? Is it just the surface or like 3 meters down, thanks, amazing fireworks!!
Thanks for the comment. I didn't measure the ice thickness, but it was still very thin and not able to support any weight (my foot easily went through at the shoreline). I would be surprised if the ice was more than a few centimetres thick at the end of this video. We have had a lot of snow this year. At its deepest we had nearly five feet accumulate, with a total of nearly 10 feet of snowfall for the season. The snow has finally started to melt, and I have the camera going to capture the thaw... stay tuned! Measuring the ice thickness is a great idea, I will try to incorporate some measurements into the next video if I can do so safely. Cheers, and thanks for watching!
@@LifesLaboratory thanks for the detailled response, fascinating timelapse
Soon as the wind stops the freeze starts
Yes. Thanks for your comment. The little bay to the right was sheltered from the sun and wind a bit more and started to freeze up first. November 2nd was a calmer day and the lake froze as soon as night fell. 2:18
Imagine if we weren't burdened with memory capacity on video cameras. We could have recorded everything
We could finally figure out the "if a tree falls in the forest..." thang. ;)
To expand on your comment, we had a very bright meteorite streak briefly across the sky not long after this footage was taken (we caught a quick glimpse through our living room window as we were watching TV in the dark, it actually lit up the room for a second). Our home is directly across the lake, and I was very hopeful I might have caught a single image on the camera. I searched frame by frame, but we missed it. The camera takes one photo every 10 seconds and it managed to sneak in between clicks. But we have gotten some decent pics of wildlife, and I have a few frames of local townsfolk curiously peeking into the lens.
Haha! I bet those confused faces looking into the camera really gave a good tickle in your belly. And hey! Don't be discouraged that you missed the meteorites on the camera, because sometimes it's more precious to capture beautiful things like that in the lens of your eyes, to capture in the gallery of your memories. God bless you ☺️❤️
I like this vid
Thanks!
Very cool
I could be wrong but it seems like day turned to night then when the sun illuminated a new morning over a fresh frozen sheet of ice over the lake… I was hoping the footage you captured and uploaded would show the ice forming throughout the daylight hours. It makes sense that it would freeze during the night due to it being colder with the moon hanging in the sky
I cut out the majority of the night footage, because a black screen is not very interesting to watch. I kept it running longer for the night it froze because you could see the reflection in the moonlight. I too was hoping to see it freeze in the day time. It came close though, the lake began to freeze within an hour of the sun setting.
What a beautiful video!
I too, was hoping to see the time lapse of a freezing surface. Very clinical. You've shown us life. Thank you.💜